Customer Conversations on Twitter Are Good Brand Management

Knowing what you're listening for is half the battle, and the first ingredient in most practice. Knowing when and how to respond is more than good etiquette. It's become an integral aspect of brand management and can mean the difference between a flop -- or worse, a crisis -- and a deposit in your company's reputation bank.

It's easy to dismiss Twitter's usefulness as a tool.

That is until you figure out that on Twitter you can find mentions of your brand and you can actually connect with customers directly and provide a first line of response. In 140 characters, you won't be able to do much more. But don't underestimate the importance of that public gesture.

How to use Twitter for customer service

Many companies started integrating customer service on Twitter. This list I created is purely for customer service, but there is another important aspect of customer support, which is why in many companies there is a community evangelist role carved out.

There are also individuals who opted into community builder roles -- some in official capacity for an organization, some because that's who they are. Go ahead and promote your many customer support people on Twitter by creating a list.

You can respond to a customer question or complaint immediately after seeing it without needing to have all the facts - take the problem solving part off line. Monitoring and responding is lightening fast, and right now it will cast you in a good light, especially if your normal customer service channels are in need of repair.

You can be proactive and let your customers know where to find you - I started a list linked above, let me know if you'd like me to add your company's team to it. This will ease some anxiety over which number to call or being on hold. Provided you don't take two days to get back to them as I described here.

You provide the added bonus of good service/product stewardship, which in turns creates a nice halo for your company and brands. Let's face it, Twitter is the most social of social networks. People have the opportunity to humanize the brand experience over time by being helpful and personal. I do wonder if companies are developing Twitter scripts?

Your customer service in social should be fair, not special. Your team should be integrated across the spectrum of communication tools your company uses.

How do you track tweets?

There are many tools you can use to track customer conversations on Twitter. For free, you could:

Lithium - web-based application that tracks social media and provides you with data on sentiment, trend spotting, buzz trend, share of voice, email alerts, customer rants and raves, as well as a platform to coordinate your response, assign tasks, add comments, and share product and marketing ideas

Spredfast - a social customer relationship management tool that combines listening, publishing, managing and measuring social activity all from one system

Collective Intellect - multi-dimensional analysis, blended qualitative and quantitative analysis, demographics and psychographics analysis; semantic engine is specifically designed to analyze large volumes of unstructured data, like social media, surveys, customer service data or any text-based resource

Spiral16 - for monitoring, collecting, and measuring the social media conversations, semantic analysis, conversation sentiment, and visualizing data in a 3D mapping so you can better understand the hubs of influencers (based on linkages) and how a message is potentially being spread

Cymfony - collects all forms of content, organizes and categorizes it, and provides a powerful but easy-to-use interface with data visualization and discovery features that allow you to gain valuable insights from selected discussion most relevant to your brand

TwelveFold - formely knows as BuzzLogic, this a technology platform helps with content relevance, measuring the impact of your media, and delivering insights into trends, themes and opportunities related to your brand and marketplace

Customer service = brand management in social media

More and more companies are discovering the power of being first line responders on Twitter for customer issues. There are many examples of great brand management through customer service. Matt has aggregated a few.

If you think that one customer with two followers may not be all that important, think again. Analysts and journalists are increasingly participating actively and may pick up on a random conversation - all of a sudden, you could have what we've come to call the Streisand Effect.

So don't jump to rash conclusion. Instead, jump on Twitter and join the customer conversation. Even if your customers are not there yet, chances are that those who talk about your company and brand on Twitter will come up in search - as in search engine search [hat tip Louis Gray].

Plus, you could start from a less than ideal position and turn things around to the point that your company develops a well though-out Twitter strategy, complete with customer segmented offers like Dell did. This is a question I get asked often: What makes Dell so special?

By reaching out from beyond the shop floor, Dell took control of its promises and started to close the brand dissonance gap. That is good brand management -- and good business.

Comments

We use Twitter all the time to promote our business and I am always astonished by the power of this little tool. As technology has evolved it's so much easier to get in contact with you customers. Twitter is most definitely a daily tool in our business. Enjoyed the article very much.

Hi Valeria! Love this post and the lists you created! Just followed them. Would love for you to add @Grasshopper to your customer service list. We use that handle to for everything from engaging and sharing to customer service. Its an easy way for our customers and prospects to get in touch with us, ask questions and get answers quickly without having to pick up the phone.

Valeria -- I enjoy The Conversation Agent a great deal. Social listening is a topic I've spent some time researching recently. Some of the more advanced tools are going beyond listening for mentions via keyword monitoring to text analytics and natural language processing to decipher the sentiment of a post and understand the various abbreviations people use on the web. The same tools dispatched to locate conversations in the public domain can also be turned to analyze customer service chat logs and even emails. Then, they have escalation paths to route trending topics to the proper agents / experts, and even transition a social issue to a case for structured resolution if necessary. Institutional listening by departments such as customer service has advanced significantly in the past few years, particularly for the major brands. And, it's an area we're likely to see and hear a lot more about in the future.